BTC $67 359 -0.21%Gold $2 341 +0.55%USD/RUB 93.42 +0.43%EUR/RUB 101.77 +0.38%Brent $67.24 -0.81%MOEX 2 854 +1.02%BTC $67 359 -0.21%Gold $2 341 +0.55%USD/RUB 93.42 +0.43%EUR/RUB 101.77 +0.38%Brent $67.24 -0.81%MOEX 2 854 +1.02%BTC $67 359 -0.21%Gold $2 341 +0.55%USD/RUB 93.42 +0.43%EUR/RUB 101.77 +0.38%Brent $67.24 -0.81%MOEX 2 854 +1.02%
Work Life
TS
Korp&Co visual
The SpaceX Exit Strategy: How Early Equity Fueled a Generation of Founders
#72848 · 14.06.2026
Work Life

The SpaceX Exit Strategy: How Early Equity Fueled a Generation of Founders

When Josh Giegel joined SpaceX in 2009, HR predicted his equity might eventually cover a down payment on a house. That modest forecast proved drastically conservative, transforming the early propulsion team into a self-sustaining ecosystem of entrepreneurs who now use their windfalls to bypass traditional startup funding hurdles.

Giegel, now 41 and founder of the AI startup Gambit, joined the company at 23 as part of a small propulsion analysis team tasked with designing the first reusable rocket engine for the Falcon 9. At the time, the startup atmosphere was defined by a mix of intense engineering pressure and financial uncertainty. Colleagues frequently joked that the fastest way to become a millionaire in the space industry was to start as a billionaire.

Over the last decade, regular buybacks turned that early equity into a flexible financial safety net. Beyond paying off his wife’s student loans and securing a home in Los Angeles, the capital allowed Giegel and his peers to pursue unconventional career paths. This financial runway has become a hallmark of the SpaceX alumni network, where former employees now provide early-stage capital for each other’s ventures. Unlike typical family-and-friends rounds, these investments often reach seven figures, allowing founders like Giegel to forgo high salaries and prioritize hiring talent to scale their own companies. This liquidity has created a distinct professional freedom, turning former rocket engineers into a cohort of risk-tolerant, self-funded entrepreneurs.

Comments (0)

Leave a comment

No comments yet. Be the first!